Initial FIFA Match-fixing Probe Clears South Africa

A FIFA investigator says that the first stage of his probe into international match-fixing has turned up no evidence implicating South Africans.

A handful of Bafana Bafana games in the run-up to the 2010 World Cup are under investigation, including friendlies against Colombia and Guatemala.

But security head Chris Eaton revealed that convicted match-fixer Wilson Raj Perumal convinced South Africa’s FA to appoint referees through his company.

Perumal is currently in a Finnish jail.

Perumal is also believed to have played a role in Zimbabwe’s tour of Asia where a number of international matches were fixed, although the current probe centres on games involving South Africa shortly before the 2010 World Cup.

The outcome of friendlies against Thailand, Colombia, Bulgaria and Guatemala in the weeks leading up to the tournament are all in question after FIFA found the match officials had been provided by a Singapore-based company fronting for match fixers.

Eaton’s comments follow a four-day trip by FIFA’s outgoing security director to Johannesburg to interview those involved and investigate any potential duplicity.

“Firstly, it is clear that the convicted criminal and football match-fixer, Wilson Raj Perumal, was involved in convincing Safa to agree to a company then managed by him to select, fund and appoint referees to certain international matches played in 2010 which are now under investigation,” Eaton was quoted as saying in a Safa statement.

“It should also be said that to date there is no information, suggestion or evidence that any player or team, including the national South Africa team, was in any way complicit with any attempt to manipulate a match.”

In May 2010, the month prior to the World Cup, the tournament hosts beat Colombia 2-1 and Guatemala 5-0 in two friendlies.